M
Mélanie Ottenio
Researcher at University of Lyon
Publications - 8
Citations - 901
Mélanie Ottenio is an academic researcher from University of Lyon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Abdominal wall & Ultimate tensile strength. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 698 citations. Previous affiliations of Mélanie Ottenio include IFSTTAR & Claude Bernard University Lyon 1.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Characterization of the anisotropic mechanical properties of excised human skin
Aisling Ní Annaidh,Karine Bruyere,Michel Destrade,Michel Destrade,Michael D. Gilchrist,Michael D. Gilchrist,Mélanie Ottenio +6 more
TL;DR: The histological investigation concluded that there is a definite correlation between the orientation of the Langer lines and the preferred orientation of collagen fibres in the dermis and the data obtained will provide essential information for those wishing to model the skin using a structural constitutive model.
Journal ArticleDOI
Strain rate and anisotropy effects on the tensile failure characteristics of human skin.
Mélanie Ottenio,Mélanie Ottenio,Mélanie Ottenio,Doris Tran,Doris Tran,Doris Tran,Aisling Ní Annaidh,Michael D. Gilchrist,Karine Bruyere,Karine Bruyere,Karine Bruyere +10 more
TL;DR: Data collected in this study can be used to develop constitutive models where high loading rates are of primary interest and the difficulties in controlling the effective applied strain rate in dynamic characterization of soft tissue and the resulting abnormal stress-strain relationships are pointed out.
Dynamic Tensile Properties of Human Skin
TL;DR: Dynamic mechanical tensile tests are conducted on 3 human cadavers aged 85, 77 and 82 to investigate the influence dynamic speeds have on the mechanical properties of human skin and identify new material data for human skin that can be applied to constitutive models.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mechanical response of human abdominal walls ex vivo: Effect of an incisional hernia and a mesh repair
Florence Podwojewski,Mélanie Ottenio,Philippe Beillas,Gaëtan Guérin,Frédéric Turquier,David Mitton +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the intraperitoneal mesh restores at least partially the mechanical behaviour of the wall and provides quantification of the effects on the strains in various regions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mechanical response of animal abdominal walls in vitro: Evaluation of the influence of a hernia defect and a repair with a mesh implanted intraperitoneally
Florence Podwojewski,Mélanie Ottenio,Philippe Beillas,Gaëtan Guérin,Frédéric Turquier,David Mitton +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that intraperitoneal mesh seems to restore the global biomechanics of the abdomen.